Sometimes, stars can be stripped away from globular clusters as they orbit a massive galaxy. Researchers have identified several instances in our own Milky Way galaxy – and they’ve also spotted gaps between these looping tendrils. What caused those gaps? One possibility: a substance known as dark matter. Following the launch of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, astronomers will use its vast, high-definition images to spot many more tidal streams – and potentially their accompanying gaps – in nearby galaxies for the first time. A prime candidate is our neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy, which appears in the illustration above. Soon, not only will researchers be able to identify tidal streams in Andromeda, they may also be able to use Roman’s fine resolution to pinpoint more properties of this mysterious substance. Credit: NASA, Joseph Olmsted (STScI)
Some of the finest, smallest details in the universe – the gaps between
elongated groups of stars – may soon help astronomers reveal dark matter in greater detail than ever before. After NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope launches, by May 2027, researchers will use its
images to explore what exists between looping tendrils of stars that are pulled
from globular clusters. Specifically, they will focus on the tidal streams from globular
clusters that orbit our neighboring Andromeda galaxy. Their aim is to
pinpoint a greater number of examples of these tidal streams, examine gaps
between the stars, and ideally determine concrete properties of dark matter.
Globular cluster streams are like
ribbons fluttering in the cosmos, both leading and trailing the globular
clusters where they originated along their orbits. Their lengths in our Milky
Way galaxy vary wildly. Very short stellar streams are relatively young, while
those that completely wrap around a galaxy may be almost as old as the
universe. A stream that is fully wrapped around the Andromeda galaxy could be
more than 300,000 light-years long but less than 3,000 light-years wide.
With Roman, astronomers will be
able to search nearby galaxies for globular cluster stellar streams for the
first time. Roman’s Wide Field Instrument has 18 detectors that will produce images 200
times the size of the Hubble Space Telescope’s near-infrared camera – at a
slightly greater resolution.
“Roman will be able to take a huge snapshot of the Andromeda galaxy, which simply isn’t possible with any other
telescope,” shared Christian Aganze, the lead author of a recent paper about this subject and a postdoc at Stanford
University in California. “We also project that Roman will be able to detect
stars individually.”
Imagine the results: Roman’s vast, exquisitely detailed images will allow researchers to easily identify many examples of globular cluster streams in Andromeda. To date, astronomers using existing telescopes in space and on the ground have been limited to studying a slightly smaller number of globular cluster streams within our Milky Way.
The vast footprint of the upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope’s Wide Field Instrument shows how much its camera could observe in a single image. (The Wide Field Instrument has 18 square detectors.) Within this footprint is a simulated Roman image. The background is a ground-based image of the main disk of the Andromeda galaxy from the Digitized Sky Survey. A photo of the full Moon from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is provided for scale. Andromeda has a diameter of about 3 degrees on the sky, while the Moon is about 0.5 degrees across. (In reality, the Moon is much smaller than Andromeda, but it is also a lot closer.) The Wide Field Instrument’s footprint captures 0.28 square degrees of the sky in a single shot. Andromeda is a spiral galaxy that is similar in size and structure to our Milky Way galaxy, but is more massive. It is located approximately 2.5 million light-years from Earth. Credit: Image: NASA, NASA-GSFC, ASU, Robert Gendler DSS; Simulation: NASA, STScI, Benjamin F. Williams (UWashington)
Is Dark Matter Between the Stars?
Dark matter, which many assume to
be a particle, can’t yet be observed directly, because it doesn’t emit,
reflect, refract, or absorb light. If we can’t see it, how do we know it’s
there? “We see dark matter’s effect on galaxies,” Aganze clarified. “For example,
when we model how galaxies rotate, we need extra mass to explain their
rotation. Dark matter may provide that missing mass.”
All galaxies, including the Milky
Way, are surrounded by a dark matter halo. As astronomers glean more about the
nature of dark matter, they may find evidence that a galaxy’s halo may also
contain a large number of smaller dark matter sub-halos, which are predicted by
models. “These halos are probably roughly spherical, but their density, sizes,
and even if they exist isn’t currently known,” explained Tjitske Starkenburg, a
co-author and a research assistant professor at Northwestern University in
Evanston, Illinois.
Roman will redefine their search.
“We expect dark matter to interact with globular cluster streams. If these
sub-halos are present in other galaxies, we predict that we will see gaps in
globular cluster streams that are likely caused by dark matter,” Starkenburg
continued. “This will give us new information about dark matter, including
which kinds of dark matter halos are present and what their masses are.”
Aganze and Starkenburg estimate
that Roman will efficiently deliver the data they need within nearby galaxies –
requiring only a total of one hour – and that these observations may be
captured by the High
Latitude Wide Area Survey.
Starkenburg will also help lay the
groundwork for this investigation through her contributions to another project
recently selected for funding by NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Research and Support
Participation Opportunities program. “This team plans to model how globular clusters form into
stellar streams by developing a much more detailed theoretical framework,” she
explained. “We’ll go on to predict where globular clusters that form streams
originated and whether these streams will be observable with Roman.”
Aganze is also excited about other
projects currently or soon coming online. “The European Space Agency’s Euclid
mission is already starting to explore the large-scale structure of the
universe, which will help us learn more about the role of dark matter,” he
said. “And the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will soon scan the night sky
repeatedly with similar goals. The data from these missions will be incredibly
useful in constraining our simulations while we prepare for Roman.”
The Nancy Grace Roman Space
Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, with participation by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and
Caltech/IPAC in Southern California, the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore, and a science team comprising scientists from various research
institutions. The primary industrial partners are Ball Aerospace and
Technologies Corporation in Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in
Melbourne, Florida; and Teledyne Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks,
California.
By Claire Blome
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
Source: NASA's Roman to Search for Signs of Dark Matter Clumps - NASA
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